Difference between revisions of "Maribum Afriqui Festival"
Anže Zorman (talk | contribs) (Added contact) |
Anže Zorman (talk | contribs) (added another 2017 date) |
||
Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
| dates and duration = | | dates and duration = | ||
| duration weeks = 35,36,37,38 (2012) | | duration weeks = 35,36,37,38 (2012) | ||
− | | festival dates = 20.11.2013-23.11.2013, 4.7.2015 - 5.7.2015, 16.9.2016 - 17.9.2016, 2.9.2017 - 3.9.2017 | + | | festival dates = 20.11.2013-23.11.2013, 4.7.2015 - 5.7.2015, 16.9.2016 - 17.9.2016, 2.9.2017 - 3.9.2017, 17.11.2017 - 18.11.2017 |
|contacts = | |contacts = | ||
{{Contact | {{Contact |
Revision as of 15:24, 2 December 2017
Programme
Besides music concerts, the festival also features dance, drumming and painting classes and workshops, theatre shows, and more. Some of the participating artists up till now have been Baba Sissoko, Yero Dicko, Joel Diarra, Lassine Kone, Barou dit Parou Diassana, Tenemakan Keita, Theatre Village Hon (all of them from Mali), Mateja Gorjup, and the band Djembabe.
The festival is also augmented by a 'house band', called Maribum Afriqui. It came to be as a result of an artist residency undertaken in 2015 in Bamako, Mali, by drummer Tina Sovuč, dancer Mojca Kasjak and guitarist Igor Bezget. Thecollective has a changing line-up, yet also features Yero Dicko, Joel Diarra, Lassine Kone, Tamara Povh, and others. The band – about which a documentary was also sho and edited by Barou dit Parou Diassana – played a number of gigs in Slovenia as well as Mali, where they once again got together in 2016.